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mark francombe wrote: > > > On Sat, Jan 10, 2009 at 1:50 PM, andy butler <akbutler@tiscali.co.uk > <mailto:akbutler@tiscali.co.uk>> wrote: > > mark francombe wrote: > > An only just discoverd feature of my Zoom h4 is mike > emulation... So... whats up with that? Does it work, is it > nonsense, if theres something in it, why dont they just emulate > the 10 best mikes, and watch them all go out of business as they > flood the market at a tenth of the price... > > > I think it's nonsense > ...and I reckon you do too ;-) > > Well yes.. I was sceptical.. HOWEVER... Isnt this basically the same > technology as amp modelling and VG bla bla... so thats all nonsense too?? not exactly equivalent. With amp modelling the start point is a full range DI signal. With the H4, you already have the sonic signature of the H4 mics. > > I suspect that it IS possible to emulate some aspects of a mike... the > eq maybe? If you started with a high quality flat response measurement type mic I bet it's possible to emulate some quirky vintage junk shop style mics to great effect. > But Dynamic Range? Would that possible in software.. well I > suppose so, it only compression.. nope, dynamic range (in technical terms) is headroom, and once it's gone you can't get it back >well Freq res then.. I guess that the > orginal h4 mikes are going to limit what any emulation can do... exactly, the sound is already coloured by their transient response and harmonic distortion. > > Interestingly, there is not much about this feature in the H4 manual... > maybe they thru it in there... and they aint that proud of it... I kind of remember that this was in their advertising blurb as a selling point. I sense the involvement of "guys in suits". andy